Folders man!
I was always too lazy for this. But I could start to archive the older threads. I save a lot I just like to read, because it's interesting or funny.Oo
Sub is 0 because that is kinda of a dump folder.
Folders man!
I was always too lazy for this. But I could start to archive the older threads. I save a lot I just like to read, because it's interesting or funny.Oo
Sub is 0 because that is kinda of a dump folder.
Here's Valve's rundown of the 10 top-selling games on Steam for last week:
1.Grand Theft Auto V
2.H1Z1
3.Counter-Strike: Global Offensive
4.Grey Goo
5.Resident Evil / biohazard HD REMASTER
6.Stranded Deep
7.Dying Light
8.Sid Meier's Civilization®: Beyond Earth
9.DayZ
10.Insurgency
For me, the fact some popular Youtuber advertise with those sites is not a synonimous of "This site is trustworthy".
Often some youtubers just offer a partnership to whatever they want, just to make some money. They are not worried if a site is or is not legit, maybe they never visited that site at all.
Of course this is just my opinion.
I am glad to have SteamGAF to help clarify which sites are more legitimate. Personally I avoided GMG for a while because it seemed sketchy to me (people pushed their referral program pretty hard in the beginning) and I've seen G2A deals on places like RPS before. If you're seeing G2A advertised heavily on a streamer site and don't have exposure to information like on here, it's easy to assume they are no more or less legitimate than anywhere else. Sure, the "too good to be true" rule should be used, but plenty of the deals I've gotten on GMG, or in bundles, or using RU trading fit that description.
As for Ubi banning people from uPlay just for using those keys though, I'll believe it when I see it. There's almost always something more to those stories or people are misusing the word "banned."
Granted, a question like that is hyperbolic, but there are illegitimate sellers on Amazon using their partners program, so it isn't that far fetched. I think it's easy to forget that this market is still pretty new and while we may be used to it here, most people aren't.
I meant Amazon as far as buying directly through them...you're right, as soon as third party people are involved all bets are off so people should try to be as informed as they can be
Wasn't there some Kickstarter to "try to buy" the Home World IP a couple of years back?
I'm amazed DarkQuest hasn't been slapped with a c&d from Games Workshop... or MB.
You can't copyright a game design, so I don't think MB can do anything. For that matter, it's been so long since HeroQuest came out that anything that was trademarked has probably lapsed.
But that's the point, it's harder to be informed than you might think. I mean, on the surface, you'd think major streamers and game sites like RPS would be safer places to get referrals from than a random internet forum. Not to mention, plenty of people on this very thread still purchase from G2A because "it's worth the risk" or don't realize it's a bad site until the link they post comes up as a banned site.
Personally, I think that's why we still see such a large amount of sales directly on Steam even when things are available cheaper elsewhere. Most people who aren't fully informed are going to play it safe and just buy directly from the source.
Not so much the game design as the logo and art that's, if not a 1:1 copy, incredibly close to the original's =p (especially the DM wizard) And anything GW was involved with (and HeroQuest was basically off-brand Warhammer) gets trademark-watched like a hawk.
Would almost be funny if that font was owned by someone. From what I can tell though, "obvious rip off" isn't illegal so long as the assets are actually new. Especially on something this old.
What I'm really trying to say is that "yes - it can be incredibly difficult sorting out the legitimacy of some of these sites, and most regular users wouldn't usually bother to put in the amount of research into these site's backgrounds as they should".
This is a thing that I mostly dislike on any thread about someone/media outlet goty list. "It doesn't my personal GOTY on the list, it's invalidated or automatically a shit list", the worst part being that mostly likely nobody takes the time to read the reasoning about why the games are in the list.
/rant off
Well, my comment wasn't so much "this is illegal" as "GW aggressively C&Ds anything that comes near their IPs or even smells like it"
And yeah, it wasn't really widely advertised as such, but it was obvious for people in the know when you looked at the races and some of the maps.
Now that I think of it, the uPlay thing is kinda troublesome because G2A is advertised by the likes of PewPewDie and such. Sure it's easy to pull the "your fault" card, but on the outside G2A doesn't exactly scream "illegal".
Then give these internet celebrities the shit and not Ubisoft, when it is once in the right.Now that I think of it, the uPlay thing is kinda troublesome because G2A is advertised by the likes of PewPewDie and such. Sure it's easy to pull the "your fault" card, but on the outside G2A doesn't exactly scream "illegal".
Then give these internet celebrities the shit and not Ubisoft, when it is once in the right.
There's plenty of blame to go around.
If I were the brass at Ubisoft, I would have penned an open letter discussing the generalities of illegitimate resellers and having something to the effect of, "As of January 31, 2015, the following retailers are authorized by Ubisoft to conduct transactions concerning our products on our behalf", followed by a list (Steam, Amazon, etc). I'd also warn customers to check if their games were purchased by G2A, file a chargeback and a claim with the BBB/local business bureau and wait a few days before deactivating the keys.
Then again, this is Ubisoft, the company that typically handles its business and game development like a bull in a china shop - with no subtlety or grace whatsoever. They deserve all the bad press they get.
The thing that annoyed me about the story was the "I bought a hammer from Walmart and they came and took it from me" analogy. No, they didn't. They bought a hammer at a pawn shop, and it turned out to be stolen.
Again, what Ubi did sounds legit and right, to me.
What a customer can do? Simple. Asking a refund to G2 dudes.
You don't need what they ask, like "Contacting Ubisoft etc." Because probably there are a LOT of tickets right now so they are aware of the issue. They should refund all customers. Did you buy your key from a vendor? They can contact him and give your money back.
So in the end, if done properly and G2A dudes act properly, this should hurt only G2A and vendors.
Not even.
"They leased a car from a leasing company, and it turned out the car was stolen so the original owners took it back." is probably the closest analogy with today's software licenses.
At least you'd have some legal recourse against a local car lease company.
Sadly, people can't really bring something in Russia/China to court easily.
Well, maybe they are requesting a proof, because even "legit" owners could say they got their game removed, to have their money back.
If an answer from Ubi should be enough, at least you can try on doing that. If they still refuse to provide you a refund after that, then you can tell'emm you'll go with legal route.
Well, Valve deactivates keys in the same way as Ubi, so it's not just them.
In mass quantities like this? Rarely.
The last time Valve revoked keys en masse (the SpaceChem beta, I think), one of Valve's support personnel had to publicly apologize to the game's discussion board for sending a false-flag signal that made people think their accounts were going to be banned.
All I'd expect is some communication from Ubi, that's all. Thank God I never bought from there, despite people on other sites (coughreddit) recommending it.
Again, what Ubi did sounds legit and right, to me.
What a customer can do? Simple. Asking a refund to G2 dudes.
You don't need what they ask, like "Contacting Ubisoft etc." Because probably there are a LOT of tickets right now so they are aware of the issue. They should refund all customers. Did you buy your key from a vendor? They can contact him and give your money back.
So in the end, if done properly and G2A dudes act properly, this should hurt only G2A and vendors.
This is a thing that I mostly dislike on any thread about someone/media outlet goty list. "It doesn't my personal GOTY on the list, it's invalidated or automatically a shit list", the worst part being that mostly likely nobody takes the time to read the reasoning about why the games are in the list.
/rant off
In mass quantities like this? Rarely.
The last time Valve revoked keys en masse (the SpaceChem beta, I think), one of Valve's support personnel had to publicly apologize to the game's discussion board for sending a false-flag signal that made people think their accounts were going to be banned.
All I'd expect is some communication from Ubi, that's all. Thank God I never bought from G2A, despite people on other sites (coughreddit) recommending it.
Sniper Elite 3 was big news last year, over 7000 keys were revoked on Steam.
http://www.joystiq.com/2014/06/30/over-7-000-stolen-sniper-elite-3-steam-keys-revoked/
I still question whether they were stolen though. I just find it fishy that every single reseller had their keys for Sniper Elite 3 deactivated. I don't doubt some will be dealing with stolen keys, but all of them seems a bit much.
Thank God I never bought from G2A, despite people on other sites (coughreddit) recommending it.
It's a banned site on r/gamedeals. You may have seen some individual idiots suggesting it, but the same is true on gaf.
I guess this is irony
Not quite sure why you have this perception. Valve revokes keys all the time, for a wide assortment of reasons. Many of us in this thread have had keys revoked (myself for the "free" GamersGate purchase of Warlock II). And I didn't get a notification from either GamersGate or Valve as to why it happened, it just happened.
They were stolen from one retail distributor, then resold to multiple companies.
Not every reseller got hit, either. CJS wasn't in that case, for example.
I think it would help if they sent a better notification, yeah. The issue with resellers at the moment is, people who don't follow the news as much, probably won't know. Especially with how Kinguin/G2A are sponsoring streamers and tournaments. Plus the publicity from other sites like Reddit, Hot UK Deals etc.I am aware. I was actually going to go into GG's terrible stance on price errors (including Warlock and the Temple of Osiris debacle, the former of which I dealt with as well), but deleted it because it felt tangential.
The key word was "in mass quantities". I am also aware of the Sniper Elite 3 removal, but I'm under the assumption that this is affecting a lot more people than that. All I'm asking for is some communication. I expect that digital storefronts rarely (if ever) need to respond to consumers regarding key removals because they're representing a lot of different companies/want to correct a price error/etc. I don't expect it from publishers who should know better than to yank a bunch of keys out sight unseen and not expect that people would start trashing them, regardless of whether they knew the keys they purchased were illegal or not.
The "does this site sell battlenet keys" test has never failed me.
Thanks for that, Blizzard.
As does any other non-reputable site.G2A does in fact sell battlenet keys.
its sad that when it breaks you realize you're such a computer reliant person
i'm so bored
As far as I'm aware (from quick googling and some skimming, but I might be wrong), they didn't get hit, but they did a hyperbole blog post about how Rebellion were revoking "hundreds of thousands" of keys to fix the market by going after sites like them.I thought they did, but only one type of key? They were selling two types like special edition and normal or something, from what I remember.